by
Melinda Pillsbury-Foster
Revival
is the engine of belief and faith. It breaks out without planning
and in unexpected places, carrying people to a more intense
relationship with God, one which strips away previous assumptions and
defenses.
Over
the past two thousand years spontaneous outpourings of emotion,
grief, shame, and joy, have accompanied a renewal of faith and love
which strengthened communities and changed the lives of the
individuals.
If
a psychologist described it they might see it as an emotional
purging, clearing the lines of communication from within the
individual to God.
Such
an event took place in Wales from 1904 – 1905, known still as the
Welsh Revival. The power of revival, the gift of God, was breaking
out in unexpected places across the small nation.
To
the staid and conventional congregants who walked into Bryn Seion
Church which gathered for church in Mount Seion that Sunday morning
the world was about to take fire.
As
they entered the church they were confronted by two young women,
described by David Matthews, the historian for the Welsh Revival, as
“youthful maidens.”
Instead
of following the long accepted practices of the church and announcing
the hymn to be sung they were asked in beseeching tones that those
entering surrender to, “the
leading of the Holy Spirit.”
Then,
one of the women burst into a spiritual song which expressed her own
experience of faith. As she sang tears streamed down her face. The
congregation gasped. Before she had finished, her companion joined
her.
All
present wondered at the meaning of this unexpected event. A young
minister appeared in the pulpit, obviously moved with emotion. He
stood there, silent, his body shaking as he also cried.
A
stillness came upon them, described like the quiet which precedes an
electric storm.
The
silence was broken when one of the proudest, “members
of that assembly fell on her knees in agonizing prayer and confessed
her sins.” Those around
her, first confused, soon followed.
The
service continued all day, without a single break.
Soon,
word was carried throughout the neighborhood and others also came.
Revivals
throughout the 20th
Century have left people who were once unsure of themselves and on
the path to destruction renewed and living different lives. During
revivals all boundaries and broken and new relationships forged in
common love and fellowship so intense as become a light forever after
to those touched.
A Prayer for Revival
Dear
Lord, who knows me completely in every part of my being. Send
to me, to my church family and to my community the healing renewal of
faith which is the gift of the Holy Spirit and Your Son, Jesus
Christ.
Show
us the power of your love and forgiveness. Grant us the will to
more fully embrace You in pureness of heart and singleness of
purpose.
And
this we pray, humbly and wholly, in the name of Jesus Christ, our
Savior and Redeemer.
Please
pray with us for revival as you prepare yourself for rest every
Sunday Night. We will also be praying for Revival at our
Wednesday Potluck in the Dining Hall at St. Peter Church.
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